Link to the Bangkok Pictures and Bangkok PhotosJanuary: back again in Bangkok. Since more than 30 years Bangkok is my “second home”. Die city and the people are amazing and lovely.Bangkok, the river city: Chao Phraya, Chinatown, Nana, Sukhumvit, The Balcony, Soi Cowboy, Siam Paragon and much much more Even it is impossible “to catch” the Bangkok feeling with pictures, I tried to catch “my Bangkok” with my Bangkok Photos. A city with never-ending possibilities and a city, which never sleeps.

If you are out in Bangkok at nighttime and you get hungry: try Nanapan, a “street restaurant” / cookshop between Sukhumvit Soi 5 and Soi 7. Since many years Nanapan has the best Thai food on the Sukhumvit and I love to be there and eat / drink / watch the people.

Nanapan (or Nanapun) is easy to find. You will find Nanapan in the middle between Sukhumvit Soi 5 and Soi 7 and located direct in front of the tailor “Baron´s Fashion”. They start service at midnight. My favorites: Pork with rice and Thai-Basilisk; Fried rice with shrimps and an egg on top.

Try it! I am sure, you will like Nanapan! Everytime I am in Bangkok, I sit there some hours and watch the people passing the cookshop….. unbelievable. Man, Woman, something in between, everything

This is the link to an amazing web page, which shows more than 100 traffic webcams in Bangkok. You only have to choose the cam, you want to see -> you will see the street etc. At Bangkok daytime (please be aware of the time shift) this web cam overview is an amazing tool!

Following you will find the actual DJ Top 10 from the Mixx Discotheque / Club in Bangkok, Thailand. The Mixx is located in the Basement of the Intercontinental Hotel (D-Floor), President Tower Arcade, next to Gaysorn Shopping Mail (BTS Station Chitlom). Musicstyle: Hip Hop and House Music on two floors. Thanks to Wesley for sharing his Top 10 with us!

As I looked for some new Restaurants in Bangkok, I found this amazing website: http://hungryinbangkok.blogspot.com .This site is real amazing: you will find there information regarding food stalls up to high end Restaurants. Every item seems to be tested by the editor himself AND you will find some recommendations as well as food pictures. IT´S WORTH A LOOK!http://hungryinbangkok.blogspot.com/

Starting from today, the green mini buses in Bangkok are “past”. After a 5 years transition period, the drivers of the remaining green buses could loose their license and get arrested if they still use their green buses.

WHAT A SHAME! I loved the green buses, because every drive has been an “special adventure” which costs 6.50 Baht.……. Anyway: in the past their have been similar announcements before, which have not been implemented so far……

Dear Friends,
I am back from New York where I met with my publisher, editor, publicist and people who are producing the Vincent Calvino film. On 6th November Grove Press released Paying Back Jack. The reviewer of I Love Mystery said, “This story is so tightly woven and entertaining it is hopeless to try to put it down. Not only was it new and fresh, but I feel like I have taken a trip to the underbelly of Thailand. It is impossible not to love this book.” Things are looking very good for the film to start production next year.Read the rest of this entry »

Book writer Stephen Leather, Bangkok

Stephen Leather is a well known Book writer, who is living in Bangkok. One of his Novels (Private Dancer) could be downloaded as PDF-File for free. Bombmaker, a Novel written by him for Sky-TV, could also be seen as TV-Movie on Sky-TV.

Norbert:Since how many years do you live in BKK and in which district do you live?

Stephen:I’ve been coming and going for the past fifteen years, but have been here consistently for the past five years. I live in Sukhumvit, not far from Soi Thonglor.

Norbert:
A lot of people hate BKK, because of the traffic-jam and the smog and so on. What is your kind of view about Bangkok: do you love, or do you hate BKK?

Stephen:Like most people, I have a love-hate relationship with the city. Yeah, the traffic can be horrendous and the smog is sometimes so bad that my eyes sting, but there are so many wonderful things about Bangkok, too. Great restaurants, great shops, friendly people. I feel more at home here than anywhere else in the world. Once you understand how the city, and the people, function, it’s a very easy city to live in.

Norbert:Bangkok has changed a lot in the past years. In your view: what have been the 3 most positive changes and what have been the 3 most negative changes?

Stephen:Positive

a. The Skytrain. It makes getting about so much easier.

b. The weak baht. Everything is stupidly affordable.

c. Luxury cinemas. Okay, it costs 300 baht a ticket but you get a seat you can lie down on and waitress service. It’s the only way to see a movie.

Negative

a. Mobile phones. No one here seems to be aware of correct mobile phone etiquette (ie don’t shout and switch them off in cinemas and restaurants.)

b. Russian tourists. Loud, brash, no manners and their ugliest women insist on taking their clothes off on Thai beaches.

c. Tailor’s shops. It seems I can’t walk more than a hundred feet down Sukhumvit without being accosted by an Indian tailor trying to sell me a cheap suit. I haven’t worn a suit since 1988.

Norbert:
Nightlife: there is a lot in Bangkok. Could you tell us your favorite places to be (Restaurants, Bars, “Entertainment Plazas”)?

Favorite go-go bars are Safari in Patpong, Long Gun in Soi Cowboy and G-Spot in Nana Plaza.

Norbert:Do you prefer Thai or “non-Thai”-Food and what is your favorite meal? And which is your favorite drink?

Stephen:I prefer Thai food, but my favorite meal is Berliner “Eisbein mit Sauerkraut und Kartoffelpuree” at “Bei Otto” though sadly I have to ration myself to once a month otherwise I put on too much weight. I’ve just given up drinking gin and tonic and switched to Black Label and soda.

Norbert:After all the years living in BKK, do you still go out to Patpong, Nana, Soi Cowboy or do you avoid this places?

Stephen:I still go to Nana Plaza, maybe a couple of times a week. It’s a good place to meet friends if you don’t want to talk too much. Just sit, watch and drink.

Norbert:I like the “Skytrain” very much, but it seems, that the Thais don’t accept the Skytrain as much as the owner wish. What could be the reasons for this behavior out of your view?

Stephen:The Skytrain is brilliant and the Thais deserve more credit for how good a system it is. The problem is, it’s expensive in Thai terms. If two people or more are traveling together a taxi is almost always cheaper.

Norbert:
Your books are real “Best-sellers”. As you know, I am a German and a lot (about 10 percent) of the visitors of the Ibiza-Bangkok Web are Germans too. Will there be a translation in German language in the future?

Stephen:Some of my earlier books were translated into German and sold quite well. I haven’t had an agent for the last two years and so things have gone quiet on the translation front. If anyone knows of a German publisher who would be interested, put them in touch and I’ll give you a ten per cent commission!

Norbert:
You have a special offer at your website and also here at the Ibiza-Bangkok-Web (take a look at the bottom of this Interview): It is possible to Download your novel “Private Dancer” for free. That’s a real nice but unusual offer. Why do you do this?

Stephen:I write a particular type of book – international thrillers. But I also like to write in other genres. I have written a book called Once Bitten, about a psychologist who tracks down vampires, Dreamer’s Cat, which is a science fiction murder mystery, The Basement, which is a police story with a twist, and Private Dancer, which is the story of a writer who falls in love with a Thai bargirl and the havoc that ensues.

They are all so different from the type of books that I normally write that my publisher is reluctant to put them out as books. So I thought that I would offer them to my readers free, through my website.

Private Dancer has been a big success on the internet – it gets downloaded more than twenty times a day and all the feedback has been favorable. It is especially welcomed by guys who are planning to visit Thailand for the first time because it warns them of the dangers of losing your heart – and your wallet – to a bargirl.

Norbert:
How many email you receive in one day? What are the most common questions?

Stephen:Considering I get up to three hundred people a day visiting www.stephenleather.com, I get surprisingly few e-mails from readers. Maybe one or two a day. That’s good for me because it means I can reply to them all. The most asked question is if Private Dancer is a true story or not. I usually say that it’s a novel so it’s a work of fiction, but based on events that have happened, if not to me then to people I know.

Norbert:
How could interested people buy your novels?

Stephen:Most bookshops in the UK, Australia and South Africa have them, and they are generally on sale in South East Asia. Especially at airports. Outside of those areas the best place is through www.amazon.co.uk. There are links to Amazon on my website, www.stephenleather.com.

“The Fireman”, “Hungry Ghost” and “The Vets” are based in Hong Kong, “The Solitary Man” is based in Thailand, and “The Tunnel Rats” is based in Bangkok and Vietnam.

Norbert:Could you please describe a typical day in your life in Bangkok?

Stephen:Pretty boring, really. I get up and go for breakfast at Jool’s Bar in Sukhumvit Soi 4, just down from Nana Plaza. The bar in Private Dancer is called Fatso’s and is based on Jool’s, and the owner of Jool’s, Big Dave, is Big Ron in the book. I try to write in the afternoon. Whenever possible I try to write a thousand words a day. In the evening I go out for dinner, or go watch a movie. Then maybe write some more.

Norbert:Which of your novels is your personal favorite and which Novel from another Book writer is your favorite?

Stephen:I love Private Dancer and am proud of the way it shows the same story from so many different viewpoints. All the viewpoints are slanted, but valid, and by getting inside the heads of all the characters you come to some understanding of why the situation developed in the way that it did. You can sympathize with everyone involved, and even when they do bad things you realize that they are often acting from the best of intentions or because they really had no choice. I think that it goes a long way to explaining why relations with bargirls often go so badly wrong.

The book I’ve read most often is “One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovitch” by Alexander Solzheinitsyn. I never tire of it. One man’s struggle against adversity, taking small victories whenever he can.

Norbert:While living in BKK always “strange” things are happening: What have been your funniest adventure in BKK???

Stephen:One of the funniest things that happened to me taught me a lot about how to deal with Thais. It happened about eight years ago and I’ve included the story in my book Private Dancer:

I was on the outskirts of the city and it was close to rush hour and I couldn’t get a taxi to take me back to Sukhumvit. All the drivers just shook their heads. I knew why: at rush hour it can lock up solid. Eventually I just climbed into the back of a taxi and told him in English where I wanted to go, then I sat looking out of the window, ignoring his protests.

Eventually he gave up complaining and started to drive. Half an hour later, the car juddered to a halt. He started up again, we drove a few hundred feet, and we stopped again. “Car no good,” he said. I leaned forward and watched as he started the car again. The engine stalled – because he was deliberately slipping his foot off the clutch! He was faking it!

He got out of the car, muttering to himself, lifted up the bonnet and stood looking at the engine and shaking his head. He opened the passenger door for me. “Car no good,” he said. “I get new taxi for you. Sorry.”

So I got out of the taxi and he walked to the back and started trying to flag down another cab. I could see what his plan was. He was going to get another taxi to stop, then he would tell the driver to keep me talking while he drove off. Then taxi driver number two would refuse to take me, and he would drive off as well, leaving me stranded. I knew that was what he intended to do, but I didn’t argue with him because I knew that wouldn’t get me anywhere.

I just smiled and nodded, and then when he wasn’t looking I climbed into the driver’s seat. He had left the keys in the ignition and I started up the car, put it in gear and drove off. I drove off slowly, just above walking pace, watching him in the mirror. He saw what I was doing and ran after me, waving his arms and shouting. I let him run for a hundred yards or so, then I pulled up and wound down the window. I smiled and gave him a thumbs up. “Car okay,” I said. “I car doctor. I fix.”

He looked at me. He smiled. He knew that I knew he’d been lying. I knew that he knew that I knew. But there was no confrontation. “Car okay?” he said. “Oh yes. No problem now. I fix.”

I got out of the driver’s seat, and moved into the back. He got’s into the driver’s seat, put the car in gear and drove off. He smiled. “Okay now,” he said, nodding approvingly.

We drove all the way in to Bangkok without any more trouble. The driver was right, of course: we hit traffic and it took us more than hour to cover three miles. But when he did finally drop me off, I gave him a huge tip. He smiled. I smiled. Face was saved on both sides. A situation that could have turned really nasty became an object lesson in how to get what you want in the Land of Smiles.

Norbert:
Did you ever get in real crime trouble/danger in BKK??

Stephen:Never. Not once. It must be the safest city in the world and it puts London to shame.

Norbert:
Out of your view: which places should every visitor of BKK visit and which should he avoid???

Stephen:I don’t think there’s anywhere a visitor should avoid. You should experience everything. Just keep out of the sun! Everyone should visit the Grand Palace, and take a long tail boat on the river and around the canals. And visit the weekend market. And eat food on the streets.

Norbert:
Because I think I never could learn it: could YOU speak / write / read the Thai-Language???

Stephen:I can speak a little and am taking lessons in reading and writing.

Norbert:and finally the last question – if YOU could change something in BKK, what would this be?

Stephen:Bigger roads and more of them. Less pollution. Fewer mobile phones. Fewer Indian tailors. Fewer Russian tourists. If Russian tourists do come, make it compulsory for their women to keep their clothes on in public.

Stephen, I thank you very much for this nice interview and which you good luck for the future!

The Interview was made by Norbert in April 2001!

And here are the Links to Stephen Leathers Website and the link to the free copy of “Private Dancer” is also attached. It could be downloaded at Stephens Website or direct here at the Ibiza Bangkok Web.

Publishing of the Pictures with Permission of Stephen Leather.

Book writer Jake Needham, Bangkok

Jake Needham, the Book writer of “Big Mango” and “Tea money”

Jake:I’m on my way back to Bangkok from LA right now. Actually, believe it or not, at this very moment, according to the flat-panel TV screen at the foot of my seat, I’m at 39,000 feet just south of the Aleutian Islands, about six hours out of LA and five hours away from Tokyo. I’m on a Singapore Airlines 747 today on which SQ is testing an in-flight system which provides continuous in-flight access to the internet and all your email accounts. They’ve even given me a power adapter so I can plug my laptop into the power outlet at the seat instead of running off the battery and waiting for the damned thing to run out.

Norbert:
How many years have you lived in Bangkok and in which district do you live?

Jake:Aey I were married almost ten years ago and we’ve maintained an apartment in Bangkok since then — although we actually lived a fair amount of the time in California and Hawaii since I’d been writing for film and television since the mid-80’s and needed to be nearer to the States when I was still doing a lot of it. When our youngest son went into the first grade, however, we decided we wanted him to go to school in Bangkok, so we bought a large duplex apartment and remodeled it into a permanent family home. It’s off Sukhumvit Road, out near Soi Thonglor

Christopher G. Moore

Bookwriter in Bangkok, also called “The Hemingway of Bangkok”

I have had the honor to have a lunch with Christopher while I have been in Bangkok. We met on 16. Jan 2001 at “Ship’s Inn” near Soi Cowboy:

Norbert:
I am glad that you find a little bit time for this Interview, Christopher. I know, that you are a very busy person, so lets start:

Norbert:You are living in Bangkok and you look, like you are happy to live in this VERY chaotic city. How long do you live here and what do you like / dislike in Bangkok???

Christopher G. Moore:I first came to Bangkok in 1983 and have lived here on a permanent basis since 1988. In some ways a very long time, in other ways a midsummer’s night sleep. Bangkok is a 24-hour city, with excitement, adventure, and diversity. I have lived in New York and London, and spent substantial time in Tokyo and Paris, but it is in Bangkok one finds a truly international city living in the midst of a very old, unique culture. It is a place of many contradictions and this provides more than ample material for a novelist to drawn upon.Read the rest of this entry »